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Radical-Relational Perspectives Transactional Analysis Psychotherapy: Oppression, Alienation, Reclamation
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Barnes and Noble
Radical-Relational Perspectives Transactional Analysis Psychotherapy: Oppression, Alienation, Reclamation
Current price: $170.00
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Barnes and Noble
Radical-Relational Perspectives Transactional Analysis Psychotherapy: Oppression, Alienation, Reclamation
Current price: $170.00
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Size: Hardcover
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Radical-Relational Perspectives in Transactional Analysis Psychotherapy
assesses various forms of oppression in current, historical and personal perspectives and considers the impact this has on the development and sustenance of the psyche.
Within this book, Minikin reformulates the ideas of Radical Psychiatry for the contemporary community, and both honours the historical legacy of including the social and political in transactional analysis and offers a critique of Eurocentrism in traditional relational perspectives. Through personal and clinical illustrations, Minikin encourages those in the TA community to move topics such as diversity from the margins to the centre when working with patients, and to integrate the political with traditional relational perspectives.
The consequences of becoming marginalized through alienation speaks across multiple disciplines in social sciences, making this a must-read for counsellors, psychotherapists and other applied psychologists who want to think more deeply about social responsibility within their work.
assesses various forms of oppression in current, historical and personal perspectives and considers the impact this has on the development and sustenance of the psyche.
Within this book, Minikin reformulates the ideas of Radical Psychiatry for the contemporary community, and both honours the historical legacy of including the social and political in transactional analysis and offers a critique of Eurocentrism in traditional relational perspectives. Through personal and clinical illustrations, Minikin encourages those in the TA community to move topics such as diversity from the margins to the centre when working with patients, and to integrate the political with traditional relational perspectives.
The consequences of becoming marginalized through alienation speaks across multiple disciplines in social sciences, making this a must-read for counsellors, psychotherapists and other applied psychologists who want to think more deeply about social responsibility within their work.